Aim for Awesome! shares reality based life tips and other awesome and amazing life experience. Share your view by commenting and e-mail! - Vern

Christmas Eve Sunset in Krabi, Thailand

Sunset on Christmas Eve 2007, an Awesome Life Experience!

Awesome life experiences are happening all around you. There are more than half a million people in the area surrounding Krabi town here in Thailand. Only 5 of us, 2 tourists, 2 Buddhist monks, and myself saw this Christmas Eve sunset exactly like this last night.

Why wasn’t there a crowd of 6,000 people at the top of the mountain to see this incredible sunset?

They were doing other things. Their minds were focused on something else. I hope it was something as awesome as this because it was a great life experience as the rest of the western world celebrated Christmas Eve.

Go out and find yourself an awesome experience. You don’t have to jump out of a plane or sled-ride down a glacier. Awesome life experiences are happening all around you and if you slowed down and looked for them you’d find them. Or maybe they’d find you?

Have a great Christmas!

:)

Best of Life!

Vern signature

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Jumping Manta Rays, an Awesome Experience!

Fort Desoto park, St Petersburg, Florida

Posts here at Aim for Awesome seem to be following an ‘awesome ocean experiences‘ theme lately, and I think that will hold true for a while until I just run out of ideas.
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This idea came to me as I was thinking about a time I was wade-fishing in the ocean at Fort Desoto park in Saint Petersburg, Florida.

It was about seven am. and only myself and another wade-fisher were standing chest deep in the cool water catching ‘gator trout’ by free-lining some shrimp on a #1 Gamakatsu hook and letting the current take it.

Nobody else was around… no boats or even kayaks. The morning was very calm and still. The sun was coming up slowly and warming our faces as we faced east. We hadn’t said anything to each other, just preferring to be in our own little worlds catching fish and spending a pristine and peaceful moment in the sea catching big trout.

Out of the stillness of the ocean there erupted a huge explosion of water and my heart was caught in my throat as I thought a mammoth shark was on a feeding frenzy and one of us larger meals (fishermen) would be next on the menu. I didn’t understand what had happened until I was able to think again. My mind had stopped and I stared awestruck as the huge creature fell back into the sea with a huge splash! Shortly after I was able to start breathing again….

I realized, it was a very large (to me) manta ray that I guess was feeding. It’s wing-span was approximately 8 feet across and it’s wings were flapping wildly as it came 2 meters high out of the water, straight up!

The other fisherman and I looked at each other after the splash and both had our own way of releasing the tension (holy ****!) then we laughed nervously, both of us very relieved that it wasn’t a shark.

Here are some short videos of jumping manta rays in groups on top of the water, filmed from boats… and then one of an exceptionally large beast filmed underwater by some divers as it jumped out of the water.

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Manta rays jumping off the coast of Costa Rica

Keep in mind, these mantas are probably 2 meters across in wingspan! It appears that they’re jumping 3-4 meters out of the water, repeatedly! What an awesome life experience that would be… so close to these incredible creatures from the sea.

Here’s a school of manta rays jumping off the coast of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.

And, finally - the very large manta filmed from underneath the water by some divers as it climbs to the surface and jumps!

Best of Life!

Vern signature

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What’s a Moonbow? An Awesome Life Experience!

Today’s awesome life experience is about moonbows! Did you ever have the awesome experience of seeing a “moonbow” at night?

What’s a moonbow?

A moonbow is like a day time rainbow, except it is formed not directly by the sun, but by the light of the moon… which is actually sunlight reflected off the moon - as you know.

I was living in Maui, Hawaii for a year and I was doing some late-night shopping at a supermarket in Kahana when I stepped outside and looked up at the full moon. I couldn’t believe what I saw within my field of view - and I had to ask other people around me to look up also. I was seeing what I thought was a night-time rainbow… a perfectly formed moonbow!

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I wasn’t entirely sure that my senses weren’t lying to me until others also said they saw it. Then I thought, maybe we’re having a paranormal experience! Ha! Then I came back to reality and pulled out my camera but my poor camera wasn’t up to the task.

With my eyes I could clearly distinguish a full rainbow with colors, not near as bright as during the daytime, but there were definitely colors in the moonbow and stretching across the Maui sky. It was an awesome moment in my life and mostly because I didn’t even realize there was such a thing. It was very clear, and there must have been some fine mist high above us where it formed. It was barely sprinkling rain on us at the time.

Photos of moonbows and credits to photographers…

1st Moonbow by Jacob Sears who originally posted at this page.

Moonbow

This 2nd Moonbow below comes from the Astronomy Club of Asheville (astroasheville.org) originally posted here.

Moonbow 2. Astronomy club of Asheville.

Pierre Lesage from Flickr posted this moonbow over Tahiti…

Moonbow over Tahiti.

Pierre said of moonbows…

‘A moonbow is just like a rainbow except it is produced by a strong moonlight. The colors tend to be more faint because there is less light hitting the water droplets.

Moonbows are rare because moonlight is not very bright. A bright moon near to full is needed, it must be raining opposite the moon, the sky must be dark and the moon must be less than 42º high. Put all these together and you do not get to see a moonbow very often! To the unaided eye they usually appear, as in the thumbnail, without colour because their light is not bright enough to activate the cone colour receptors in our eyes. Nonetheless colours have been reported and might be seen when the moon is bright. ‘

Haikugarry from Flickr posted this amazing moonbow from Maui! I also clipped what he said about it… Awesome Garry… I wonder if you saw the one that I saw… Let’s see, it was year 2003…

Moonbow over Maui.

Garry said, ‘During a bright enough moon we occasionally get a moonbow. I have only seen this 3 times in 10 years on maui, and for the first time i was prepared… and FINALLY have proof for all the disbelievers.’

Gary has some especially awesome photos. If you have time take a look at his Hawaii photos taken from a kite on Flickr.

Best of Life!

Vern signature

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My 2 Near-Death Bodyboarding Experiences in Oahu Hawaii’s Big Surf

I’m not a dangerous person. I don’t consider myself a ‘thrill seeker’ by the usual definition. But, that said, I have had a few times that I’ve almost died while trying to enjoy this crazy thing called “Life”. This is a post about 2 such near death experiences that happened in the Pacific ocean while I was living on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. I call them ‘Awesome Experiences’ but they were awesome only because I came through them OK… alive. I faced something during both of these experiences that was scary enough to be labeled “possibility of death”.

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I swam all my life growing up - in swimming pools in Pennsylvania. I was a good swimmer and yet at 18 years of age I still needed months of time in Oahu’s strong waves before I felt like I understood a bit of what waves were all about. It took months more to be confident in the water in all kinds of surf, and yet even so, I never paddled out in waves that were higher than 10 or 12 feet Hawaiian scale (15-24’ for all other scales).

It was 1986 and was just turning winter in Hawaii. Winter consists of 70 to 80 degree days and a cooler breeze at night than during the summer. I had been bodyboarding for almost 2 years at this point and I’d never really gone after the big waves. That summer I’d ridden 6-8 foot waves (Hawaiian scale) in Waikiki at “Walls” and those were the biggest waves I’d ever faced. It was so much fun that I had to go in search of a little larger wave to see if it was even more fun!

I loaded up the MGB convertible and went solo up to the North Shore of Oahu where I heard there was a nice swell beginning. Kasey, my usual bodyboarding fanatic friend had to work that day, and thinking back on it now it was really stupid to go up there alone in big surf.

Now, the thing about swells when they are beginning is that they are in the process of growing all the time. They might grow over a couple days, or they might grow over the course of one day. Looked at on a macro scale, they may grow literally from one set of waves to the next… and that’s the usual pattern for waves. There are the regular sets that roll in for 20 minutes at a time, maybe 50 minutes at a time… and then, bam, a bigger set or two roll through and then back to the regular sized sets.

I had watched the waves for about 20 minutes prior to getting in the water. They were quite a ways out away from shore and it wasn’t that easy to read them from that distance. I was at “Sunset beach park” at a break called “Backyards” which breaks very far out - a couple hundred yards from the beach. There were plenty of people out there already and so I thought I’d go check it out and see what it was like. From what I saw the waves were 8-10 feet Hawaiian scale and breaking very cleanly and smooth… They were essentially perfect waves. There were only about 20 surfers out and 2 other bodyboarders. It was around 9:30 am.

I paddled out, and I was amazed at the currents there. The rip current pulled me out of the way down current from where I wanted to be. It took quite an effort to get back to where the group was. By this time I was pretty tired, having been spoiled by Waikiki and the Windward shores close breaks - within 50-100 yards from shore. I caught my breath over the next 10 minutes and watched some picture perfect waves roll in. Some waves went without riders, that’s how many great waves were coming… the pros could pick and choose the best of the best, and they did.

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Me? I waited until I was fully rehabbed and breathing regularly again before I was ready. When I thought I was ready I looked in back of me as I heard whoops from the other surfers that spotted the set that was to be my undoing. I saw glare from the wave faces far in the distance. When a big set is coming you can see the bumps of it FAR off in the distance, beyond where you were seeing the waves form before. The big sets give you a clue by forming earlier and they grow as they come in. By the time a big set reaches the spot the regular waves were forming you’ll get an idea how big they’ll be. This set was way in the distance, and yet was coming fast. It was HUGE. Far bigger than I’d ever been in front of in the water. Guys were paddling out to it so they could get a longer ride, as the big sets are rideable much further out than the regular breaking sets.

Me? I paddled out toward them too a bit, knowing that if I got caught in front of the set after it broke I was in a lot of trouble.

I decided on a safe strategy of taking the first wave in to shore and getting the hell out of the water just as the mammoth set erupted behind me.

Nobody was on the first wave of that big set, and that’s the good news because if I had to catch any of the others I’d have been on 20 foot + Hawaiian scale waves which were twice as big as any wave I had caught in Hawaii.

The first wave of the set is always smaller than the rest. As it turned out I found myself at the top of a 15 foot wave that was moving fast. It was so fast that I thought to myself as I came down the wave face, that’s amazing that the bottom of my board skimming the top of this wave is making so much noise… I knew I was on an epic ride because the speed I was moving was so beyond what I had done before.

I rode the wave as long as I could, and still I was 80-100 meters from the shore. I looked in back of me to find wave after wave, lined up like the pulses of a 20-30 foot tsunami unleashed on me.I frantically dove as deep as my bodyboard leash would allow (6 feet) and hoped that the wave wouldn’t grab me and pull me with it. I lucked out after that 2nd wave of the set, but the next one HAMMERED me. Sitting here in my one room flat in southern Thailand thinking about that event that happened 21 years ago and I couldn’t possibly tell you in words what it was like.

It’s not that I don’t remember because I remember it quite vividly, and I can feel something in my stomach as I type this on the computer. The fear of dying if I stopped trying to fight these waves was all I had to keep me going. I had no strength left after about the 4th wave as strength wanes quickly when there isn’t enough air to fuel the muscles to fight the million gallons of water thrashing me around and holding me under in loose foam clouds that were churning like a washing machine on super-cycle.

The thing about loose foam, the white water that happens as a wave pummels a surfer and holds him under is that it’s impossible to swim in. You can try, but there’s more air bubbles than water and so when you are trying to move in swimming movements, it’s more like you’re trying to fly through air than swimming. We all know, humans can’t fly through air. Neither can you swim in air. Basically you need to hold your breath until you float to the top. If you can’t do that, you’re gonna pass out and probably die inhaling water after that.

There were a couple times as wave after wave came and I was able to eventually float to the top after 20 seconds or a minute, that I reached the top and didn’t really realize I was at the top. There wasn’t elation at reaching the top, but a vague stillness that I guess was me in an altered state of consciousness where I just wasn’t getting enough air to understand what was going on all the time. Once I breathed a breath or two and dove again I was aware for the next 20 or so seconds and then I sort of relaxed and let the natural buoyancy of my body and bodyboard take me to the surface and did it again.

I don’t know how many waves were in that set, but there were over 15 and I was like a wet surf-rat by the time I floated lazily into shore, about 300 meters from where I entered the water… the current took me down shore but I could care less at that point. I had the worst time trying to remove my fins and the straps that kept them on my feet as there was some shore-break that was giving me the final insult to my ego as it played with me and made me look stupid like a grommet that overestimated his abilities to get in the North Shore surf during a nice swell.

When I stood up in the knee-high surf at the shore I stumbled and some people were there watching. Nobody bothered to say anything, they understood that I was ok since I made it to shore. Apparently they see a lot of people barely making it to shore there. Some don’t make it at all. I walked about 15 steps up the steep incline of the sandy beach where I knew the tide wouldn’t get me and I flopped down in the sand next to my board.I spent the next couple hours laying in the sand right there, 300 meters from where my backpack was up the beach. I had no cares about someone stealing my things or even taking the car… I was ‘alive’ mostly and that’s what mattered right then… I drifted in and out of sleep and finally had the energy to walk to the car after 3 hours of exhaustion and baking in the hot Hawaii sun.

After this ‘adventure’ I thought seriously about the possibility that I could have died there in the water. I think had it not been for the strength of my bodyboard and leash system (Turbo bodyboards) I think I probably would have died. I’m a slow learner though, and 16 years later because of poor quality equipment I almost died in the water in Waikiki!

Near death bodyboarding experience #2 at “Magic Island” in Ala Moana Park on Oahu’s south shore: May 2002

In May the south shore swells on Oahu were starting. This marked my favorite time of the year since I much prefer bodyboarding on the south of Oahu than in the northeast or at the North Shore. I heard that a swell was already in progress at one of my favorite places to bodyboard, Magic Island in Ala Moana park in Waikiki. Ala Moana is a large beach park across from the Ala Moana Mall. I’d guess it’s about 2km long. The part called “Magic Island” is a peninsula that goes out into the bay a bit and where there’s a pool of shallow water protected by man-made rocks and concrete to block the waves, even the big ones from hitting the kiddie pool area.

Beyond those rocks is where I liked to bodyboard. There were consistent and easy to read waves that broke there on a south swell. When I arrived I was almost in tears of joy as I saw 4-6 feet Hawaiian scale waves and only 5 guys riding them.

I had a $90 Morey medium-hard foam bodyboard with a plastic tube leash that was anchored through the center front of the board - just under my chin as I rode the board. It had a straight strap with two layers of Velcro to attach firmly to my left wrist. This bodyboard was much cheaper in quality than the bodyboard I’d had 16 years before on the North Shore when I had the near death experience. That “Turbo” board, built by Russ Brown I used was $120 back in 1985 and was very solid and heavy and was able to take the stress of hundreds of pounds of pull on the leash without failing.

The waves at Magic Island on this day were not that big and I thought the Morey board was ‘good enough’. After all, it was a $90 board, not a $30 board. There must be some difference in strength. I thought this board could handle 6 foot surf. I was really wrong.

I caught a couple of waves right off and they were phenomenal! They were coming fast and were almost curling into a partial pipe which was strange for this break. There were many people standing on the boardwalk watching us bodyboard and it was a beautiful sunny day and wave after wave of boardriding bliss.

I duck-dived one wave (dove under it) that started to take me backwards with it so I let the board go and I went further underwater without the board. It was attached to my wrist and I’d never had a good leash break before. What happened was not that the leash broke… the board broke. The leash was attached with a plastic rod that held the leash down through the center of the board and that had a large hard plastic cap on the bottom of the board that was supposed to prevent the leash from popping out of the foam. This it did. To the board’s credit, the leash did NOT pop out of the foam.

What did happen was that the center plastic piece that went through the board ripped the board almost 3 feet long-wise, shredding the board and leaving me in 10 foot surf without a board to float on. I heard people at the beach scream when they saw the board, they thought a shark had grabbed it since the foam was ripped in a jagged serrated pattern, not unlike a shark might inflict.

I was able to swim for a while, trying to head back into the rocky shoreline but the current was much too swift. I spent 20 minutes swimming hard against the current, unable to find a clean path through the coral and around the current. I was scraping my legs and fingers as I tried to swim gently over top of the coral. The waves had other ideas and raked my body across the coral at will.

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Finally I was on the verge of panic since I realized that I was nearly depleted of strength. Luckily I saw a Hawaiian guy paddling out on his long-board and I asked him if I could hold onto his board for a minute to recoup my strength. He let me, despite us being overrun by waves every couple seconds. I asked him where the best spot was to get back into shore and he showed me the one path through the coral where I wouldn’t get too cut up. I took that path, and still got cut up as the current took me right over the coral again but, at least I was back at the shore. I found my board, took pictures and sent them to Morey, complaining that they’re crummy board almost got me killed. They promptly sent me an upgraded board free of charge and next day air. That was nice, they didn’t have to… but, knowing Hawaii is such a small place and that everyone would have talked about it - they did the smart thing!

I did the smart thing too from that point on - I only bodyboarded large surf 1. With a friend. and, 2. With a well built board that was built for big waves!

Here’s a page with some photos of waves that were similar to the ones I faced at the North Shore that day… the wave looked most similar to the one next to the entry for “Cribbar”.

; )

Best of Life!

Vern signature

If you need Hawaii appraisal services I have a good friend that does them on Oahu, Maui, Kauai and Big Island. His name is Christian Van Dyck and he’d love to hear from you! Tell him Vern sent you!

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